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WELLINGTON TOPICS.

'INTERNATIONAL RECIPROCITY. ftjRADE WITH FRANCE, '■*'-'■■ ' (Special Correspondent.)' Wellington, Jan. 29. The Hon. A. M. Myers, who, as Acting Minister of Finance, Minister of Customs and Minister of Munitions and Supplies, came into closer commercial contact with the members of the French Mission' than did any of his colleagues, has been talking in general terms of the prospects of reciprocal trade between the Dominion and France. He is in whole-hearted sympathy with the resolutions adopted by the Paris Conference in 191G which were inspired by a common desire among the Allies for closer economic relations and for the preservation of a spirit of mutual goodwill. He sees a hundred reasons why this spirit should be fostered and encouraged and a hundred more why it should be extended in a bountiful measure towards the brave people whose representatives the Dominion has had the privilege of entertaining. While Germany has sacrificed the last shred of any claim she ever may have had upon British friendship, France, with the respect and regard of the whole nation, has earned a right to every trade advantage the Empire may have to offer. THE LABOR CAMPAIGN The National Executive of the New Zealand Labor Party has decided to launch next month an extensive organising and educative campaign for the purpose of increasing the strength of the party These are almost the exact words in which the Hon. J. T. Paul announces to the world at large that he and other Labor members of Parliament are about to "stump" the country in an attempt to stir the electors into some concern for their own political salvation, Neither of the older parties seems particularly perturbed by the announcement. It is admitted that the intentions of Mr Paul and his colleagues are admirable and that their motives are much the same as the motives of other politicians, but it is pointed out that their appeal iB addressed, almost exclusively, to audiences of their own w-ay of thinking, which, like the righteous man of the scriptures, need no repentance. With more than an average share of the ability of a not highly gifted Parliament and with a public eager for a new political gospel they utterly fail to turn their opportunity to good account. Anl so, their friendly critics soliloquize, the march of democracy is delayed.

AT THE PEACE CONFERENCE. Even the Evening Post, which is not in the habit of belittling the Dominion's services to the Empire in the war is a little shocked at their being used as an argument for the admission of a second New Zealand delegate to the Peace Conference. "The familiar contrast between the Empire and the parish pump," it says, referring to the matter, "is hardly wide enough to fit the case, for it is with the affairs not of the Empire but of the world that the Peace Conference is concerned, and it is to a parochial claim based upon parochial considerations that it has been compelled to devote some of its attention. There is a pretty general feeling here that if Mr Massey really did say that New Zealand's efforts in the war were proportionately equal to those of the Mother Country and greater than those of any other Dominion, he somewhat overstated the case and presumed too far upon the indulgence of the Imperial authorities. It must be remembered, however, that the other side of the story has not yet been told.

THE EFFICIENCY BOARD. The Acting Prime Minister's statement in regard to the approaching dissolution of the National Efficiency Board has not satisfied the critics of the Government. The Dominion thinks it only "calculated to deepen the wonder occasioned by the Government's rejection of the offer made by the members of the Board to indefinitely continue their honorary and very useful activities" and declares it leaves Ministers "open to the charge of having failed to profit by one of the most elementary lessons of the war period." Other critics are less restrained. The truth of the matter appears to be that the Government does not feel justified in continuing an arrangement which was made specifically for the war period only and which in spite of the honorary services of the members of the board involves the country in a considerable annual expenditure. No doubt what is being done was decided upon before the party leaders left the Dominion.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TDN19190201.2.37

Bibliographic details

Taranaki Daily News, 1 February 1919, Page 6

Word Count
730

WELLINGTON TOPICS. Taranaki Daily News, 1 February 1919, Page 6

WELLINGTON TOPICS. Taranaki Daily News, 1 February 1919, Page 6